- Joined
- 18 February 2006
- Posts
- 4,200
- Reactions
- 2
wayneL said:Lower growth is bullish?
LOL well during May/June/July Higher growth was bearish
I'd replace the words 'lower growth' with 'easing sustainable consoldating growth'
As far as I'm concerned, if the US economies growth eases it will take the premium out of the Oil Price and an easing of base metal prices,
however for the base metals story strong underlying fundamental demand from the 'Chindiapan' trio (China India Japan, borrowed this pun form another forum psoter) combined with moderately easing growth consumption demand from the US and EU will keep a floor under the prices supporting the notion of a super cycle theory or a shift in the new long term avg,
I understand the a slowing US consumption will hurt Chinese export goods but its econmy has been growing at break neck pace, so a slowdown to 5-7% growth levels would be good, also China has a multi trillion dollar trade surplus which it can quite easily use to finance its continued industrilisation (ie demand for commodities)
When you look at the big picture, decades of under investment in the resources industry comibined with the sheer inability to bring new projects on stream will ensure that stock levels of most base metals will remain very tight, the key is to steer clear of anything China is a net exporter of and jump on anything china imports, take a look at JML its going to take another year to bring its Copper/Zinc project online, then take a look at ZFX/BHP/WPL and any other major who has been trying to bring a large new project online, the key theme is delays, lack of equipment, lack of people and above all cost blowouts,
There is no way supply for commdities like Nickel/Zinc/Copper/Oil and especially URANIUM are going to be able to come online as quickly as has been predicted, these supply restrictions which have and will continue to result in tight production levels combined with strong demand for commodities will ensure that the Commodities Bull has many years left to run, the only way to de-rail it would be a global recession brought on by some sort of catastrophic event, Bird Flu, Nuclear War etc and if this was to occur, falling investment values would be the least of our concerns!
All in all, I see a long term prices
Zinc around $1.25-$1.75 per lb
Copper $2.50 - $3.50 per lb
Nickel, I can't say
Oil $60-$70 a barrel
Uranium $50-$100 per lb
My preferred Resource investment exposure is Uranium, then Oil, then Zinc then Iron Ore and finally Gold, however one cannot ignore Nickel and Coppers presence,
Until next time, stronger for longer!